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The Fundamental Five
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Published on Nov 18, 2015
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1.
THE FUNDAMENTAL FIVE
ADDING VALUE TO TEACHERS' CRAFT & STUDENTS' LEARNING
Photo by
Giridhar-Photography
2.
FRAME THE LESSON
Framing the lesson is simple.
Tell kids in plain terminology WHAT they are going to learn.
Objective is written as “We will...”
Tell kids in plain terminology HOW they are to demonstrate their learning.
Product is written as “I will...”
Photo by
Erik J. Gustafson
3.
BLOOM'S TAXONOMY
USE WORDS FROM BLOOM'S TO WRITE YOUR OBJECTIVE & PRODUCT.
4.
POWER ZONE
Students are actively engaged; focused.
The teacher is up and monitoring.
Teacher can easily move from one area to another. No clutter!
Does NOT look like students working independently at a small group table
Does NOT look like the teacher sitting at a desk, table or overhead/Elmo through the entire lesson.
Photo by
mariskar
5.
PURPOSEFUL TALK
Have your “seed” questions in mind before teaching your lesson.
Look for natural breaks in lesson plans to stop. Use a timer to keep it quick.
Students may be table partners, shoulder partners, cross town partner, etc.
Teacher in the power zone listens to correct misinformation.
Students demonstrate how they relate the material to their own lives
Photo by
chefranden
6.
Recognition & Reinforcement
Make it specific and personal – Be honest. Use the student's name.
Keep it Positive! Flippen says 7:1 ratio (7 positives to 1 negative)
Reward the effort they took – even if it is not all it needs to be.
Make your room a safe place.
Look for opportunities to recognize students and reinforce effort.
Photo by
Neal.
7.
CRITICAL WRITING
It is students thinking on a topic critically...on paper.
It is not a time for journal writing.
Kindergarten students will begin with pictures.
It might be a list, short paragraph, thinking maps/graphic organizers, purposeful note taking,
exit tickets, or summaries. It should lead to higher level questions/thinking.
Photo by
woodleywonderworks
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